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Posts Tagged ‘cognitive dissonance’

Informed public = better democracy?

As Churchill* once said: “When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?” This article in The Boston Globe makes the argument that democracy is actually damaged levitra online by the way that people respond to being contradicted by evidence (they dig in rather than adapt to it). It uses this [...]

Voters as consumers

Nick Clegg has gone on the attack. His target is the London Borough of Barnet’s easyCouncil model of service provision. There are a number of ways of portraying Barnet’s idea, but I’ve not seen many that appear to be very kind. As a Barnet resident who has to use Ryanair in his line of work, [...]

Fewer people agree with you than you think

Being a politician is a good deal harder than most of us realise. Recent posts here about cognitive polyphasia remind me that being a politician involves squaring a number of unsquareable circles. Here’s the RSA’s Matthew Taylor on cognitive dissonance and the rose coloured mirror. People – the voters (trans: you and I) don’t recognise [...]

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